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Iran to install new nuclear equipment at Natanz site

AFP - Iran intends to install more modern equipment at Natanz, one of
its main nuclear sites, according to a document seen by AFP on Thursday.
The U.N. atomic agency document said that Iran informed it in a letter
dated January 23 that “centrifuge machines type IR2m will be used in
Unit A-22” at the Fuel Enrichment Plant (FEP) at Natanz.
The International Atomic Energy Agency replied in a letter dated
January 29 asking for more information on the announcement, which comes
despite international sanctions aimed at slowing Iran’s nuclear program.
Natanz in central Iran is currently used to enrich uranium, a process
at the heart of the international community’s concerns about Iran’s
nuclear program, mostly using older model IR-1 machines, which operate
more slowly.
A Vienna diplomat told AFP on condition of
anonymity that the new machines would likely be used to enrich uranium
to fissile purities of five percent.
Of greater concern than
Natanz is Iran’s Fordo site, which enriches uranium to 20-percent
purities, significantly closer to the 90-percent level needed for a
bomb.
“So far they are mostly only enriching to five percent at
Natanz, so it would be a surprise if Iran came back and said it was for
20 percent,” the diplomat said.
Enriched uranium can be used
for peaceful purposes such as in atomic power stations - Iran currently
has one functioning plant -- but also, in highly-enriched form, for a
nuclear bomb.
Because of concerns that Iran may be seeking to
develop nuclear weapons, something it denies, numerous UN Security
Council resolutions have called on Tehran to suspend all enrichment
activities.
Several rounds of sanctions have been imposed on
Iran aimed at preventing it procuring and developing technology for its
nuclear activities.
Unilateral sanctions imposed in 2012 by the
United States, the European Union and others have also targeted Iran’s
vital oil exports, leading to major economic problems.
Israel,
which believes Iran must be prevented from reaching military nuclear
capabilities at any cost and refuses to rule out military intervention
to that end, warned the advanced centrifuges would edge Iran closer to
nuclear arms.
“While the world is discussing where and when
the next meeting with Iran will be, Iran is rapidly advancing towards
obtaining a nuclear bomb,” a senior official in Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu’s office said in a statement.
“The international
community cannot allow Iran to arm itself with a nuclear weapon,” the
official was quoted in the statement as saying.
The IAEA
declined to comment on Thursday. The Vienna-based agency is due to
release its latest quarterly updated on Iran’s atomic activities on
February.
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